Mountains! when next I saw ye it was Noon, And Summer o'er your distant steeps had flung Her veil of misty light: your rock-woods hung Just green and budding, though in pride of June, And pale your many-spiring tops appeared, While, here and there, soft tints of silver grey Marked where some jutting cliff received the ray; Or long-lived precipice its brow upreared. Beyond your tapering pinnacles, a show Of other giant-forms more dimly frowned, Hinting the wonders of that unknown ground, And of deep wizard-vales, unseen below. Thus, o'er the long and level plains ye rose Abrupt and awful, when my raptured eye Beheld ye. Mute I gazed! 'Twas then a sigh Alone could speak the soul's most full repose; For of a grander world ye seemed the dawn, Rising beyond where Time's tired wing can go, As, bending o'er the green Rhine's liquid lawn, Ye watched the ages of the world below. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...TO CERTAIN JOURNEYMEN by CARL SANDBURG A LETTER FROM ITALY by JOSEPH ADDISON THE FACE ON THE [BAR-ROOM] FLOOR by HUGH ANTOINE D'ARCY WRESTLING JACOB by CHARLES WESLEY THE BRIDE AND GROOM by WILLIAM EDWARD ADAMS TO MR. MONTGOMERY; OCCASIONED BY ... ATTACK ON HIS POEMS by LUCY AIKEN |